You are choosing to do something rather than nothing, — Harry Hindu
Then how do you learn anything, MU? What is it that makes you learn to do things and not others? — Harry Hindu
All of your actions have consequences. Isn't the consequences, the end result of your action, and how that matches your present goal, what you are choosing? If not, then what do you hope to accomplish when you make a decision? — Harry Hindu
Ridiculous. If you make decisions to do anything, one of the options available in making that decision, is to do nothing. Sometimes you end up doing nothing if you take to long to make a decision. Doing nothing also has it's consequences.First, I wouldn't say that anyone is choosing to do something rather than nothing unless they're specifically have that idea in mind. — Terrapin Station
That wasn't the question, MU. Try again.Then how do you learn anything, MU? What is it that makes you learn to do things and not others? — Harry Hindu
The act of thinking is how I learn things. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, thinking about the consequences, or the outcome, of your actions tends to have an effect on the kind of decision you make. In order to think, you have to be thinking about something, MU. Your obtuseness is getting old, MU.All of your actions have consequences. Isn't the consequences, the end result of your action, and how that matches your present goal, what you are choosing? If not, then what do you hope to accomplish when you make a decision? — Harry Hindu
There is something missing in your logical process Harry. You seem to think that consequences magical cause people to make the decisions which they do. But that's not the case, it's the act of thinking which produces the decisions, not the consequences of prior actions. That this is true is very obvious from observing people with mental illness, or who have different types of mental deficiencies. Clearly, it is the thinking which causes the decision, not actual consequences of past actions, nor possible consequences of future actions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ridiculous. If you make decisions to do anything, one of the options available in making that decision, is to do nothing. Sometimes you end up doing nothing if you take to long to make a decision. Doing nothing also has it's consequences. — Harry Hindu
You have subconscious desires that come into play when making decisions. — Harry Hindu
That wasn't the question, MU. Try again. — Harry Hindu
Yes, thinking about the consequences, or the outcome, of your actions tends to have an effect on the kind of decision you make. In order to think, you have to be thinking about something, MU. Your obtuseness is getting old, MU. — Harry Hindu
For one, try answering that question that followed right after that one.That wasn't the question, MU. Try again. — Harry Hindu
The question was "How do you learn anything, MU?". The answer was "The act of thinking is how I learn things". Where's the problem? — Metaphysician Undercover
What is it that makes you learn to do things and not others? — Harry Hindu
As I have already stated, the consequences in your head are predictions of the consequences, not the consequences themselves. Who would ever say that ALL the consequences in your head exist out in the world? It seems to me that if determinism, then only one consequence exists outside your head, which may or may not be one that is predicted in your head, which explains why your sometimes fail to predict the consequences, which ironically are the ones you learn the most from.Sure, I'm thinking about things when I think. But all these thoughts, and things which I am thinking, are inside my mind, and just part of my act of thinking. Why would you think that something outside my mind, such as "consequences", has any causal power over my act of thinking? That makes no sense to me, because only thoughts enter into my act of thinking. So thoughts about consequences may enter into my act of thinking, as part of the act of thinking, but the consequences themselves don't enter into the act of thinking and therefore do not have any causal power within the act of thinking. — Metaphysician Undercover
The way I take this is: "I'm going to say whatever I want and to hell with anyone who doesn't understand what I say and asks questions because they don't understand what I said." Thanks for nothing, dude.I'm not going to bother answering irrelevant questions based on misunderstanding. When you learn to read carefully we might be able to begin a discussion. — John
For one, try answering that question that followed right after that one.
What is it that makes you learn to do things and not others? — Harry Hindu
Second, thinking and learning don't necessarily correlate. You can think of imaginary things, or just colors. What are you learning there? — Harry Hindu
Don't you learn by experience - like the experience of doing certain things and observing the results? — Harry Hindu
As I have already stated, the consequences in your head are predictions of the consequences, not the consequences themselves. Who would ever say that ALL the consequences in your head exist out in the world? It seems to me that if determinism, then only one consequence exists outside your head, which may or may not be one that is predicted in your head, which explains why your sometimes fail to predict the consequences, which ironically are the ones you learn the most from. — Harry Hindu
So, only humans make decisions? Are we anthropomorphizing other organisms that seem to behave in ways that imply that they make decisions to? Why is it useful to use the term "decision" as a metaphor for what the computer is doing when processing IF-THEN-ELSE statements? What is the exact process of making a decision? How does it proceed in time?Correct. A computer making a "decision" is only metaphorical--it's a way that we think about it, anthropomorphizing it, to make it easier for us to conceptualize. — Terrapin Station
No definition I have found mentions that it requires conscious options. Besides, introducing the word, "conscious" just opens a big can of worms and complicates things considerably.Decisions require conscious options. We pick one of the options we're conscious of. — Terrapin Station
So, only humans make decisions? Are we anthropomorphizing other organisms that seem to behave in ways that imply that they make decisions to? Why is it useful to use the term "decision" as a metaphor for what the computer is doing when processing IF-THEN-ELSE statements? What is the exact process of making a decision? How does it proceed in time? — Harry Hindu
Why is it useful to use the term "decision" as a metaphor for what the computer is doing when processing IF-THEN-ELSE statements? — Harry Hindu
What is the exact process of making a decision? How does it proceed in time? — Harry Hindu
No definition I have found mentions that it requires conscious options. — Harry Hindu
I find it interesting that the experience of interacting with MU and John has created this prediction in my mind that their same nonsense will be repeated in any future interaction with them. — Harry Hindu
How could I predict your behavior without having first observed it? You first behaved some way for me to interpret and then use that interpretation to make future predictions of your behavior. If I had never observed your behavior, I wouldn't be able to make a very good prediction. I'd just be making an educated guess of your behavior based on my experience with other people.Sorry to have to disillusion you, but it wasn't my behaviour which caused any of this, it was your interpretation of my behaviour which caused this. Your mind created this prediction, not my behaviour. — Metaphysician Undercover
Exactly. It seems like you're finally coming around. Predictions of some outcome has a causal influence on your actions. Different predictions can produce different actions. How do you explain how the same behavior can produce different interpretations, which in turn produce different predictions of the outcome?Another person would have interpreted my behaviour in a completely different way, producing a completely different prediction, and that's why I think it's all a creation of your own mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then it isn't anthropomorphic to describe other non-human systems as making decisions.Only animals that have consciousness, that can have options in mind and then choose one. Whether that's only humans or not, I don't think we know for sure. I assume that a number of animals with complex brains not too far off from human brains can make decisions though. — Terrapin Station
Ok, then why are metaphors useful? Isn't it because there is an element of truth in them?That's kind of like asking why metaphors are useful in general. Aren't you familiar with metaphors in general? — Terrapin Station
No. I'm simply asking you what it's like for you to make a decision. Give me the process, step-by-step.Are you asking for a blueprint of just what goes on in the brain? Because we don't know that very well yet. — Terrapin Station
For one, it's a made-up definition. Second, it's a more complicated definition. Like I said, you open a can of worms when using the term, "conscious" - something that hasn't been clearly defined either. Why don't you simply try answering the question of how you make a decision so we can move this discussion forward.No definition I have found mentions that it requires conscious options. — Harry Hindu
What does that have to do with anything? Are you thinking that I'm doing a dictionary survey for you? — Terrapin Station
Then it isn't anthropomorphic to describe other non-human systems as making decisions. — Harry Hindu
Ok, then why are metaphors useful? Isn't it because there is an element of truth in them? — Harry Hindu
No. I'm simply asking you what it's like for you to make a decision. Give me the process, step-by-step. — Harry Hindu
For one, it's a made-up definition. — Harry Hindu
Huh?It is if people are thinking of it as a metaphor for humans making decisions. — Terrapin Station
That's fine to say, but it doesn't mean that a metaphor isn't saying something useful, and therefore truthful.That's fine to say, but it doesn't make a metaphor not a metaphor. — Terrapin Station
I don't understand "mentally throwing dice" or "hitting the button on the random generator at random.org" Are you saying that you are visualizing rolling dice or hitting some button on a website when making a decision? Why don't you explain the process of one of these other decisions that you make.Oh. Well, it depends on the decision. It's not as if they're all the same. For whim decisions, it's simply like mentally throwing dice or hitting the button on the random number generator at random.org . For other decisions it's much more of a process. — Terrapin Station
I never said definitions are found under rocks. They are found in dictionaries.All definitions are. Definitions are not found under rocks. People make them up. — Terrapin Station
Huh? — Harry Hindu
That's fine to say, but it doesn't mean that a metaphor isn't saying something useful, and therefore truthful. — Harry Hindu
Are you saying that you are visualizing rolling dice or hitting some button on a website when making a decision? — Harry Hindu
Why don't you explain the process of one of these other decisions that you make. — Harry Hindu
I never said definitions are found under rocks. They are found in dictionaries. — Harry Hindu
How could I predict your behavior without having first observed it? You first behaved some way for me to interpret and then use that interpretation to make future predictions of your behavior. If I had never observed your behavior, I wouldn't be able to make a very good prediction. I'd just be making an educated guess of your behavior based on my experience with other people. — Harry Hindu
It seems like you're finally coming around. Predictions of some outcome has a causal influence on your actions. Different predictions can produce different actions. — Harry Hindu
How do you explain how the same behavior can produce different interpretations, which in turn produce different predictions of the outcome? — Harry Hindu
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